126
126
Nov 23, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN
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to children is under the side of freedom to express religion and make sure religion has a broad role in civil society. host: what was your day job before this? guest: running a construction company. i'm going back to it. we have a team that is been in the family. i staffed up to rome for three years. i left the team intact. worldwidef catholics in the united states. that according to the pew research center. number ofthe catholics in united states as is theworldwide, what influence of the catholic church in the united states as it currently stands? guest: the historic, deep religiosity and focus on family which is in the latin culture is a huge opportunity for the church and a huge opportunity for our country to reinforce our dedication on the sounding principles of human dignity, religious freedom, family, and willingness to oppose the state when it encroaches. 11 people that i know i'm a which is many of them -- the latin people that i know, which is many of them, are vigorous in defending their individual rights and liberty and those of their family against government encroachment
to children is under the side of freedom to express religion and make sure religion has a broad role in civil society. host: what was your day job before this? guest: running a construction company. i'm going back to it. we have a team that is been in the family. i staffed up to rome for three years. i left the team intact. worldwidef catholics in the united states. that according to the pew research center. number ofthe catholics in united states as is theworldwide, what influence of the...
171
171
Dec 1, 2013
12/13
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WJLA
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if you arere a secularist, you think that religion is what happens on sundays and the rest of the week religion does not exist, but the argument of these institutions is that our areolic soup kitchens embodidiments of our faith, and thus, ought to be exempt as well. those cases are likely to succcceed in the supreme court. aut a for-profit corporation is aicier one because of that issue e of, is e corporation itself e entitled to first amendment rights? >> about on obamacare, accordind o'keefe, senate democrats, the political messing operation is urging senators use the brake to publicize good news about obamacare. mewhile, senate republicans are urging their folks to push website, talkingg about the gripes and shortcomings of obamacare. it is the battle of the anecdote. >> that is the political overlay for this whole thing. whether this is a struggle -- when you get down to it, crystallize the issue obamacare -- between those that want to do something good and decent for people, providing health care to 40 million people that do not have it, or those who have the morality of indiffere
if you arere a secularist, you think that religion is what happens on sundays and the rest of the week religion does not exist, but the argument of these institutions is that our areolic soup kitchens embodidiments of our faith, and thus, ought to be exempt as well. those cases are likely to succcceed in the supreme court. aut a for-profit corporation is aicier one because of that issue e of, is e corporation itself e entitled to first amendment rights? >> about on obamacare, accordind...
65
65
Oct 12, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN
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eye 65
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to tell me they do not have a religion. it is not the religion most americans believe in. everybody has a religion. that is why they are trying to silence you. the secular religion is ok, but yours is not. gentlemen, i am here at the value voters because , the issues are what you are here to defend and to make sure they are heard on capitol hill. the foundation of this country is the dignity of every human life because they are the creation of a loving god. that, it is open season on all of us. the government can do whatever it wants. i tell all of these economic conservatives, you guys are not thinking through this very clearly. you are not thinking through the consequences. of throwing overboard all of these unpopular social issues. you're not thinking through the of the breakdown of the family and the tremendous increase of government spending that comes in every neighborhood where the family is broken. government cannot be limited if families are disintegrating. i am here to say thank you. thank you for being here and standing for the core values of our country, for th
to tell me they do not have a religion. it is not the religion most americans believe in. everybody has a religion. that is why they are trying to silence you. the secular religion is ok, but yours is not. gentlemen, i am here at the value voters because , the issues are what you are here to defend and to make sure they are heard on capitol hill. the foundation of this country is the dignity of every human life because they are the creation of a loving god. that, it is open season on all of us....
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got involved he wanted to commit some sort of because it was religion or is this it right it's something as simple as even watching a jihadi video you know they put on the stand so-called experts who say you know because you watch this video radicalized and therefore he wanted to commit some sort of act of terrorism you know which is ridiculous i've watched you how to videos you probably have that doesn't make a sound when you saw but the but does watching one necessarily make you interested in committing an act of terrorism and that's been what the f.b.i. has been used to argue against entrapment by saying he was predisposed to commit a crime so so in essence what they're arguing is that these jihadi videos are such incredibly good recruitment true so they could turn ordinary americans in the terrorists and therefore we've got to turn ordinary americans into thinking that they're terrorists so that we can arrest them and put them in jail i don't follow the logic chain here the logic is they want to catch the terrorists of tomorrow today so they want to turn them into the terrorists befo
got involved he wanted to commit some sort of because it was religion or is this it right it's something as simple as even watching a jihadi video you know they put on the stand so-called experts who say you know because you watch this video radicalized and therefore he wanted to commit some sort of act of terrorism you know which is ridiculous i've watched you how to videos you probably have that doesn't make a sound when you saw but the but does watching one necessarily make you interested in...
83
83
Dec 1, 2013
12/13
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CSPAN2
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capitalism and our second favorite religion, christianity. in certain ways, the americanization of hawaii in the 19th century parallels the americanization of america. just as the pier at ten forebears had set off on their arrogance into the wilderness of living lent, the new england missionaries of sale for the islanders in a place they thought of as a spiritual wilderness. just as perhaps nine out of ten needed so th since the america e wiped out by contact with european diseases fell with the native hawaiian population ravaged by smallpox, measles, whooping cough and venereal disease. just as the industrial revolution and building of the railroad brought in the huddled masses of immigrants to the united states, the sugar in patients founded by the sons of the missionaries required massive inputs of labor, primarily from china, japan, korea, portugal and the philippines transforming hawaii into what it has become, a multiethnic into which every race is a minority. hence the plate lunch. two scoops of japanese styled rice and one scoop of ma
capitalism and our second favorite religion, christianity. in certain ways, the americanization of hawaii in the 19th century parallels the americanization of america. just as the pier at ten forebears had set off on their arrogance into the wilderness of living lent, the new england missionaries of sale for the islanders in a place they thought of as a spiritual wilderness. just as perhaps nine out of ten needed so th since the america e wiped out by contact with european diseases fell with...
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135
Nov 17, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN3
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we to explain this paradox in which a culture which appeared to reject traditional values concerning religion, the family, gender roles and individual rights as opposed to group rights, rejecting all these, and yet elect a candidate such as ronald reagan? today i want to posit and argue and argue, and you can respond, the key social issues, including abortion, the equal rights amendment, e.r.a., and prayer in school played an integral role in reagan's election and the rightward shift in american politics. and moreover, it was these traditional issues or these social issues that mobilized traditional women to become involved in politics on the grassroots level. to oppose e.r.a. and abortion while supporting legislation or constitutional amendment to allow prayer in schools. and this mobilization activated a disheartened conservative movement and laid the foundation for reagan being elected in 1980. the grassroots campaign that emerged over the social issues showed republican party operatives that roman catholic licks, traditionally aligned with the democratic party, and nonaligned evangelical
we to explain this paradox in which a culture which appeared to reject traditional values concerning religion, the family, gender roles and individual rights as opposed to group rights, rejecting all these, and yet elect a candidate such as ronald reagan? today i want to posit and argue and argue, and you can respond, the key social issues, including abortion, the equal rights amendment, e.r.a., and prayer in school played an integral role in reagan's election and the rightward shift in...
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104
Dec 7, 2013
12/13
by
MSNBCW
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eye 104
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there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. at root, every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, some equivalent of the idea that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper. some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world. and to future generations. you know, i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful messenger of peace and justice. i haven't had a chance to meet him yet. but everything that i've read, everything that i've seen from him indicates the degree to which he is trying to remind us of those core obligations. and as i said in my speech yesterday, we live in a economy that is the greatest generator of wealth in history. we're risk takers, we're entrepreneurs, and we're rugged individuals. that's part of what makes us great. that's why we continue to be a magnet for strivers from all around the world. they think i'm not going to be held back b
there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. at root, every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, some equivalent of the idea that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper. some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world. and to future generations. you know, i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful...
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97
May 26, 2013
05/13
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KNTV
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. >> here's what i think the religion or -- i don't think he was taking orders from god. i think that is overstating it. but he -- what -- when he stopped drinking, he had never been especially successful up to the time that he was drinking. he stopped drinking and at the same time, he became more religious. and i think he always felt -- chris: that happens a lot. >> that that -- because of the stopping the drinking and the more -- being more religious that's why -- >> i don't know if most presidents, and you would know this, you've written a book about former presidents, i don't know if most presidents don't become more religious when they're president. they're usually the highest authority in the room when they're in the room. they are. and they have a need to look somewhere else. for guidance. >> a lonely job. >> it's lonely. it's difficult. >> and who can you confer with? where can you get some census sustenance? -- some sustenance? religion works. >> and life and death and sending people to work. chris: this is a good discussion. the discussions usually about w are s
. >> here's what i think the religion or -- i don't think he was taking orders from god. i think that is overstating it. but he -- what -- when he stopped drinking, he had never been especially successful up to the time that he was drinking. he stopped drinking and at the same time, he became more religious. and i think he always felt -- chris: that happens a lot. >> that that -- because of the stopping the drinking and the more -- being more religious that's why -- >> i don't...
68
68
Dec 6, 2013
12/13
by
MSNBCW
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eye 68
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. >> there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper, some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world and to future generations. and, i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful messenger of peace and justice. i haven't had a chance to meet him yet, but everything that i've read, everything that i've seen from him indicates the degree to which he is trying to remind us of those core obligations. and as i said in my speech yesterday, we live in a market economy that is the greatest generator of wealth in history. we're risk takers. we're entrepreneurs. and we're rugged individualists. and that's part of what makes us great. that's why we continue to be a magnet for strivers from all around the world, because they think, you know what, i'm not going to be held back by con
. >> there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper, some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world and to future generations. and, i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful messenger of peace and justice. i...
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admitted we're the my religion i'm here for to believe what's going on for at least some of the least simply are your lie and i put it simply not true as none of these countries have repudiated a national health care program that could the only kind anyway i like that is so that i don't test that the test when one of the first european countries come forward and repudiate then you'll tell me oh it was seen the light ok well they were closer than you are switzerland yes switzerland has no national health care program there is no national health care for but they require that everybody have health care and they made it a felony to run a health insurance program on a for profit basis and therefore their program runs quite well and it costs half of what ours does that is government on regulated health care that all of those however my job. all of it is docking about ron and the reason for that is i'm a regular they are on their hello grossest i'm not talking much what's in the lion's share of the new additions with obamacare are going to be going into the medicaid program it is normally a
admitted we're the my religion i'm here for to believe what's going on for at least some of the least simply are your lie and i put it simply not true as none of these countries have repudiated a national health care program that could the only kind anyway i like that is so that i don't test that the test when one of the first european countries come forward and repudiate then you'll tell me oh it was seen the light ok well they were closer than you are switzerland yes switzerland has no...
248
248
Nov 5, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 248
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but advancing religion, check. must not result in excessive entanglement between government and religion. if they want to openhe government and religion. it meets all the criteria, they should be able to do it. >> there's a weird legal dichotomy in allowing it prior to a meeting but not during it. that's interesting how they're going to reconcile it. >> i'm sorry, does not entanglement, the third of the three? >> yes and no. if you're saying it's secular in purpose, how is it not secular in purpose during versus before? it's a little bit where they're drawing a line legally. fine, that's their job t >> the first amendment they lfal back on for their argument the people who wrote the first amendment were in the first congress who opened their op congress with a prayer.he i think frankly it's a little bit of a reach. this has been going on since tht beginning of the republicans i suspect it will be forever. >> greg? >> i am of the -- i am always polite when people are praying when you go over to somebody's house and
but advancing religion, check. must not result in excessive entanglement between government and religion. if they want to openhe government and religion. it meets all the criteria, they should be able to do it. >> there's a weird legal dichotomy in allowing it prior to a meeting but not during it. that's interesting how they're going to reconcile it. >> i'm sorry, does not entanglement, the third of the three? >> yes and no. if you're saying it's secular in purpose, how is it...
87
87
Apr 17, 2013
04/13
by
CSPAN
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eye 87
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he read it and could not believe here was religion that anybody believed was teaching that you would go to paradise by killing innocent people. that just seemed so strange. and i'm extremely grateful that most muslims don't believe that. they don't believe they should get themselves a ticket to paradise by killing innocent people. they believe in reason and talking and trying to work things out. hey don't want to be ruled and taken by radical islamists either. i have had people approach me airport, but people have come up and indicate, aren't you in congress? yes. 'm from egypt. i was getting ice cream and one said, aren't you in congress? he said you are helping the wrong people. he had family still in egypt and he said you are helping the radicals. you are helping the muslim brotherhood. we don't want them running it in egypt. we want freedom and your government helps the wrong people. you help the muslim brotherhood. he said, please dell others, quit helping the radicals. and i have been surprised that was not the first time, but it was the most recent time that someone turned out
he read it and could not believe here was religion that anybody believed was teaching that you would go to paradise by killing innocent people. that just seemed so strange. and i'm extremely grateful that most muslims don't believe that. they don't believe they should get themselves a ticket to paradise by killing innocent people. they believe in reason and talking and trying to work things out. hey don't want to be ruled and taken by radical islamists either. i have had people approach me...
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15
tv
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bigotry call it i don't i don't have a better word and he's dressing it up in religion but it's bigotry is. is this is this fellow that we just saw going to be regarded as a fossil and as a bigot you know soon as as so many are in other areas we're is the sports world different than the rest of america you know increasingly across america we don't put up with this kind of talk anymore but in the sports world it seems like it's like this insular little subculture play a think that we're this is going to be a similar situation to the way the reaction to collins is going to influence the way that other players who might be considering coming out react i think that the way that people react to broussard's comments the way that the network reacts to it the way that other anchors react to it will influence the way that the sports world deals with these issues as as more i mean it this is similar to don't ask don't tell this is an issue of whether or not there will be gay player in the future there are gay players now and the question is whether or not they're going to be comfortable coming ou
bigotry call it i don't i don't have a better word and he's dressing it up in religion but it's bigotry is. is this is this fellow that we just saw going to be regarded as a fossil and as a bigot you know soon as as so many are in other areas we're is the sports world different than the rest of america you know increasingly across america we don't put up with this kind of talk anymore but in the sports world it seems like it's like this insular little subculture play a think that we're this is...
46
46
Jul 27, 2013
07/13
by
CSPAN2
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eye 46
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so one could say as he friends did, he outwinged religion as usually understood. that intensity, that inner intensity he possessed is, was a factor that kept the field sparkling, interesting, important, never slack, and he actually said to, i think, -- a wonderful swedish write like hammarskjold was a member of the swedish academy. he said in this work we're doing every detail counts. that re-- reflects. he meant it. it reflects the way in which the field of contact, the field attention that he created around him, and that lifted up everybody, really, how all the details were atouched by what he was. so how to conclude. perhapses with a few words that he said, you can feel the threat against the future stronger and stronger. but paradoxy enough parallel to that is growing and irrational conviction that we shall be able to breakthrough the cause -- cause l of chain of clumsiness, self-assertion, and common stupidity. and he also said it reflects the breadth of his vision the wounds are felt through the body of mankind. i often think about, you know, great men and w
so one could say as he friends did, he outwinged religion as usually understood. that intensity, that inner intensity he possessed is, was a factor that kept the field sparkling, interesting, important, never slack, and he actually said to, i think, -- a wonderful swedish write like hammarskjold was a member of the swedish academy. he said in this work we're doing every detail counts. that re-- reflects. he meant it. it reflects the way in which the field of contact, the field attention that he...
121
121
Mar 31, 2013
03/13
by
MSNBCW
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eye 121
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at the same time, you had the religion on the other side. the southern baptistry and whatever it was. >> whatever the racists were. i tend to see lee lij on like a vessel to put whatever you want. the good people put good things in it and the bad people put bad things in it. then they call that god. but since i don't think there is a god, i think it's just us. there's nobody here but us chickens, you know. it's really great if a religious institution wants to do good things. we need that. but ultimately, individual or even church -- a whole church getting together to do something good, that's not going to be enough. we have to do the secular things like big government programs and that's where you get into trouble. a lot of really nice religious people think that's really terrible. >> this can sometimes be that disconnect between charity and justice, right? i'm thinking in the days following katrina. the baptists, some of the great, the casserole ladies, they baked the casseroles, they came out but were not supportive of the massive infrastr
at the same time, you had the religion on the other side. the southern baptistry and whatever it was. >> whatever the racists were. i tend to see lee lij on like a vessel to put whatever you want. the good people put good things in it and the bad people put bad things in it. then they call that god. but since i don't think there is a god, i think it's just us. there's nobody here but us chickens, you know. it's really great if a religious institution wants to do good things. we need that....
98
98
Dec 6, 2013
12/13
by
MSNBCW
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eye 98
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there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. at root, every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, some equivalent of the idea that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper. some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world. and to future generations. you know, i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful messenger of peace and justice. i haven't had a chance to meet him yet. but everything that i've read, everything that i've seen from him indicates the degree to which he is trying to remind us of those core obligations. and as i said in my speech yesterday, we live in a economy that is the greatest generator of wealth in history. we're risk takers, we're entrepreneurs, and we're rugged individuals. that's part of what makes us great. that's why we continue to be a magnet for strivers from all around the world. they think i'm not going to be held back b
there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. at root, every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, some equivalent of the idea that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper. some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world. and to future generations. you know, i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful...
56
56
May 13, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
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eye 56
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i don't think those who evens are unrelated. >> host: religion as a crash course in practical politics as well mass opposition politics. can you make a link -- do you think there is a linkage between the kind of religious opposition to communist authority that the pope offered to pols and the religious opposition to the shah that the ayatollah off -- offered to iranians? >> guest: i think they're different because the pope, with all of this conservativism and dock turnal matters was obsessed with human rights. john paul ii wrote quite extensively about human rights. he had suffered under boths in sis occupation of poland and in the stalin poland. so he had an entire philosophical direction based on the human individual and human rights. ayatollah khomeini did not have the view like that. he had the view that islam was everything and individual rights very often had to be super seeded to that. so they were very fundamentally, if i may say, different. but there are some striking parallels. and one of the interesting parallels is that both of these men were mystics. in some ways they were
i don't think those who evens are unrelated. >> host: religion as a crash course in practical politics as well mass opposition politics. can you make a link -- do you think there is a linkage between the kind of religious opposition to communist authority that the pope offered to pols and the religious opposition to the shah that the ayatollah off -- offered to iranians? >> guest: i think they're different because the pope, with all of this conservativism and dock turnal matters was...
84
84
Jul 4, 2013
07/13
by
CSPAN2
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eye 84
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very provocative thesis this was a year in which basically the backlash or the return of markets and religion to global politics in a big way signal ad counter revolution towards the reactions of the earlier postwar era. how did you come up with that? who could possibly write a book, margaret thatcher, ping, ayatollah khomeni, afghan communists and iranian revolutionaries have in common, never mind pope john paul the second and resurgence of religion in a polish national life which is a whole fascinating part of the book? how did you come up with putting these things together. >> guest: had a loot to do with my reporting in afghanistan after 9/11. you were there too. if memory serves me we actually stayed in the same house for a while. you were with "washington post." i was with "newsweek." the house struck me at the time. it had the shag carpeting and light fixtures with a ranch style house. just like kind of houses we were growing up in the '70s when i was a kid. i was kind of struck by that. when you went outside in kabul, driving with 1970s american cars with eight-track players in them i
very provocative thesis this was a year in which basically the backlash or the return of markets and religion to global politics in a big way signal ad counter revolution towards the reactions of the earlier postwar era. how did you come up with that? who could possibly write a book, margaret thatcher, ping, ayatollah khomeni, afghan communists and iranian revolutionaries have in common, never mind pope john paul the second and resurgence of religion in a polish national life which is a whole...
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86
Dec 28, 2013
12/13
by
CSPAN2
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eye 86
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that was an important movements which came up the very next year . >> host: religion, practical politics as well as in opposition politics. can you really make a link? keeping that there is a link between the time of religious opposition to communist authority. the religious opposition to the shaw. >> guest: i think they're different. he was obsessed with human rights. john paul the second road quite extensively. he had suffered under the nazi occupation of poland and the stalinist time. so he was really quite a assessed. he built up an entire personal, philosophical direction based upon the primacy of the human individual and human rights. there was a view that is mom was everything an individual rights harry often had to be superseded. so i think in that respect there were very, very fundamentally different, but there are some striking parallels. and monday interesting parallels , both of these men were mystics. in some ways they were very unusual in their religious beliefs. john paul the second had an intense mystical relationship to christ and the virgin mary and was not your ordinar
that was an important movements which came up the very next year . >> host: religion, practical politics as well as in opposition politics. can you really make a link? keeping that there is a link between the time of religious opposition to communist authority. the religious opposition to the shaw. >> guest: i think they're different. he was obsessed with human rights. john paul the second road quite extensively. he had suffered under the nazi occupation of poland and the stalinist...
83
83
Sep 29, 2013
09/13
by
CSPAN2
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didn't know him, a loss of hope and as for being a roman catholic which isn't as politically correct religion in that era were kennedy told the presbyterian ministers at a houston meeting where catholicism was at stake he said when my brother got in during world war ii and flew his last an official mission over the english channel no one asked him what his religion was. lyndon johnson was a great president on domestic issues. he did usher in the great society. in its first two years in the highest office of the land he got through medicare which the truman first proposed the civil rights act, voting rights for blacks for the first time in the south where they didn't have to pay the tax or the u.s. constitution to get to register to vote. federal aid to education at all levels starting from head start to college. public housing who, national parks, in the environmental law, you name it but of course of vietnam and like most presidents, john same did have a stable of speechwriters. once he asked about uncertain speech to be prepared and the speechwriter brought him the first draft and they look
didn't know him, a loss of hope and as for being a roman catholic which isn't as politically correct religion in that era were kennedy told the presbyterian ministers at a houston meeting where catholicism was at stake he said when my brother got in during world war ii and flew his last an official mission over the english channel no one asked him what his religion was. lyndon johnson was a great president on domestic issues. he did usher in the great society. in its first two years in the...
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74
Jun 8, 2013
06/13
by
CSPAN2
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eye 74
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health problems to contribute to areas like medicine and the arts to politics and business, sports and religion. now is the time to work on that vision. i stand ready to work with you, samhsa does, in every way for us to act to make this vision a reality. thank you for the opportunity to share with you this morning. [applause] >> thank you very much. we were fortunate to have the opportunity to have been put into vice president biden's task force commissioned by the president following the sandy hook tragedy. as we engage in conversations with the vice president as well as the various secretaries, we don't need another study, we don't need another commission. there are some that are still on shelves but still have a lot of relevance to the challenges we face because they were full of recommendations that have never been implemented but one thing we very clearly advocated for was that we wanted this president, president obama to use the bully pulpit of the presidency to take mental health out of the shadows. those where the exact words that we used in meeting with vice president and secretaries.
health problems to contribute to areas like medicine and the arts to politics and business, sports and religion. now is the time to work on that vision. i stand ready to work with you, samhsa does, in every way for us to act to make this vision a reality. thank you for the opportunity to share with you this morning. [applause] >> thank you very much. we were fortunate to have the opportunity to have been put into vice president biden's task force commissioned by the president following...
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113
Jun 21, 2013
06/13
by
FBC
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eye 113
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is the president's suggesting that religious freedom for protestants and catholiis alike and their religions be damned. i mean, it was an unbievable performance. >> you can make this stuff up. the fact that the president would even have the thought when he saw that sech that this was a speech i am going to give. there are so many other important topics to be covered. let's not forget, the first lady was not without fault on this trip either. we call our michele antoinette. obama, the $3,000 nice we did not tell. lou: you don't really want to put her up at the mot six, now do you, brad? >> no, but the type of money that the fir family spends. lou: we spend money. you know, iot it. i get it. let me ask you this. let me ask you this as we wrapup . immigration reform, are we going to have it or not? and if we do get it, is it going to be something besides just a deigned proposition against the amican people? very quickly. >> very quickly, it looks like we're headed t60 on something in the unite states. remember, this is step one. the use is going to taket into one thi and sd it back. the senate
is the president's suggesting that religious freedom for protestants and catholiis alike and their religions be damned. i mean, it was an unbievable performance. >> you can make this stuff up. the fact that the president would even have the thought when he saw that sech that this was a speech i am going to give. there are so many other important topics to be covered. let's not forget, the first lady was not without fault on this trip either. we call our michele antoinette. obama, the...
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of the past because that's where this book is taking our kids one of the themes is the importance of religion when it comes to politics because it all separation of church and state thing was just a suggestion another of course is obamacare that suggests that it's worse than mass murder for profit because according to ted cruz providing health care to poor people is quote worse than any war but the best part the absolute best part about this is that it's a coloring book which means your children will get a unique chance to interact with cruz's ideology and film the texas senators hall the lifeless outline with color but surprisingly this isn't the first time that propaganda about the government has been made how to bowl for children who can forget the nine eleven commission reports dumbed down comic book version or what about the bin laden raid coloring book titled the kids book of freedom guys this trends go to and don't indoctrinate your kids with pre-established political beliefs before they can even read.
of the past because that's where this book is taking our kids one of the themes is the importance of religion when it comes to politics because it all separation of church and state thing was just a suggestion another of course is obamacare that suggests that it's worse than mass murder for profit because according to ted cruz providing health care to poor people is quote worse than any war but the best part the absolute best part about this is that it's a coloring book which means your...
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May 12, 2013
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communists and the iranian revolutionary having, nevermind pope john paul ii and the resurgence of religion as a factor in polish national labor which is a whole fascinating part of the book. how did you come up with putting these things together? >> guest: it had a lot to do with my reporting in afghanistan after 9/11. you were there too. we actually, if memory serves me we actually stayed in the same house for a while. you were with "the washington post" and i was with "newsweek" and that house struck me at the time and had this shag carpeting and particular light fixtures and it was a ranch style house just like the kind of houses we were growing up in the 70s when i was a kid. i was kind of struck by that. when you win out in kabul and were driving around in american cars and sometimes with eight-track tape players in them and we all remember what those were, the ministry buildings were built in the 1970s and then when he went to the bookstore and cobbled you found all these great postcards and books about afghanistan in the 1970s. what all of this showed was that afghanistan was actual
communists and the iranian revolutionary having, nevermind pope john paul ii and the resurgence of religion as a factor in polish national labor which is a whole fascinating part of the book. how did you come up with putting these things together? >> guest: it had a lot to do with my reporting in afghanistan after 9/11. you were there too. we actually, if memory serves me we actually stayed in the same house for a while. you were with "the washington post" and i was with...
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Feb 8, 2013
02/13
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, because religion can be toxic. and what we have to do is we have to make sure that when we say we are religious people, that what we're really talking about is how we can live our lives with others in ways that they don't suffer as much. there's pain, all kinds of pain, but those who have less have more pain, and have more - they're limited more, because we make sure that someway, somehow they're always having to look for food, look for money to get some clothes, look for a place to stay - they're always looking, they're not getting very much, because they have to look so much and so on. and so i think the critical thing is how can we make things work on earth where people will know - that the church, for instance, that is out in the forefront. martin luther king calls it the drum major. you've got to be the drum major - leading the band, the march, the parade. but what is the church? it's the tail light on a car - it's just always behind. and so i think what we must do is turn things to a point where we come to un
, because religion can be toxic. and what we have to do is we have to make sure that when we say we are religious people, that what we're really talking about is how we can live our lives with others in ways that they don't suffer as much. there's pain, all kinds of pain, but those who have less have more pain, and have more - they're limited more, because we make sure that someway, somehow they're always having to look for food, look for money to get some clothes, look for a place to stay -...
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Oct 20, 2013
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they believe in religion. they believe in some of the same principles and values that republicans hold dear and so we used to get a large percentage of that vote and we need to do everything we can to get back to that. we also need to seek the votes of other minorities particularly asians but other minorities as well because we will need those votes. we'll continue to need those votes. they are ever growing voter blocks and if we're going to win an election. >> on the budget, jim, the question is is there a deal to be had where republicans give in somewhat on some tax increases and the president gives in on both entitlement reform and spending cuts. that seems to be where there's a possible deal. >> here's my view of that, fareed. the biggest problem we have fiscally facing the country today is this huge debt bomb, which has been created as a result of ever more government spending. and much of that spending of course is not legislated by the congress. it happens automatically. the entitlement programs keep sp
they believe in religion. they believe in some of the same principles and values that republicans hold dear and so we used to get a large percentage of that vote and we need to do everything we can to get back to that. we also need to seek the votes of other minorities particularly asians but other minorities as well because we will need those votes. we'll continue to need those votes. they are ever growing voter blocks and if we're going to win an election. >> on the budget, jim, the...
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Dec 29, 2013
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is religion making a comeback in america? people are hungry beyond what is offered in the sexually charged culture of what dominates our lives. pope francis was named time magazine 2013 of the year. bill o'reilly's killing jesus is a best seller and duck dynasty has captured the hearts of tens of millions of americans. and the history
is religion making a comeback in america? people are hungry beyond what is offered in the sexually charged culture of what dominates our lives. pope francis was named time magazine 2013 of the year. bill o'reilly's killing jesus is a best seller and duck dynasty has captured the hearts of tens of millions of americans. and the history
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Dec 28, 2013
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i don't think those two events are interrelated. >> religion as a crash course in practical politics as well as in opposition politics. can you really make a linkage? do you think there's a linkage between the kind of religious opposition to communist authority that the pope offered to polls and the religious opposition to the shah that the ayatollah offered to iranians? are they the same phenomena or are they different? >> guest: i think they are different because the pope with all of his conservatism and doctrinal was obsessed with human rights. john paul ii wrote extensively about human rights. he had suffered under both nazi occupation of poland and the stalinist and the stalinists. metropole and so he was quite success excess. he builds up an entire personal philosophical direction based on the human, the primacy of the human individual and human rights. ayatollah khamenei did not have anything like that. he had the view that islam was everything and individual rights very often had to be superceded to that. i think in that respect they were very fundamentally different. but the
i don't think those two events are interrelated. >> religion as a crash course in practical politics as well as in opposition politics. can you really make a linkage? do you think there's a linkage between the kind of religious opposition to communist authority that the pope offered to polls and the religious opposition to the shah that the ayatollah offered to iranians? are they the same phenomena or are they different? >> guest: i think they are different because the pope with all...
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Jul 4, 2013
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we are tolerant of all of the religions. and yet, there is a reluctance to name the inning. you can't win if you are not willing to do that. i -- [applause] on my website i had a meeting with the combatant commanders back in 2003. i got back to the office and i was concerned and i gerdemann know and it is on rumsfeld dhaka. i said basically we don't have the metrics to know if we are winning or losing the war montara. we have a pretty good idea the number of people that are being killed or captured. but we don't know the number of people that are being recruited. we don't know the number of people that are being trained in them pravachol madrassas and pakistan funded from the people all across that part of the world. we don't know the amount of money that is being contributed to train terrorists and to teach people how to strap on a suicide vests and kill people. the purpose of terror isn't to kill terrorism, it isn't to kill people, it is to terrorize them, to alter their behavior. you can't defend against terror because th
we are tolerant of all of the religions. and yet, there is a reluctance to name the inning. you can't win if you are not willing to do that. i -- [applause] on my website i had a meeting with the combatant commanders back in 2003. i got back to the office and i was concerned and i gerdemann know and it is on rumsfeld dhaka. i said basically we don't have the metrics to know if we are winning or losing the war montara. we have a pretty good idea the number of people that are being killed or...
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Dec 6, 2013
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there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. at root, every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, some equivalent of the idea that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper, some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world and to future generations. and i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful messenger of peace and justice. i haven't had a chance to meet him yet but everything that i've read, everything that i've seen from him indicates the degree to which he is trying to remind us of those core obligations and as i said in my speech yesterday, we live in a marked economy that is the greatest generation of wealth in history. we're risk takers, we're entrepreneurs and we're rugged individualists and that's part of what makes us great. that's why we continue to be a magnet for strivers from all around the world. they think, you know what, i'm not goi
there's no great religion that doesn't speak to this. at root, every great religion has some equivalent of the golden rule, some equivalent of the idea that i am my brother's keeper and my sister's keeper, some notion that even as we each take individual responsibility for acting in a responsible and righteous way, part of our obligation is to the larger world and to future generations. and i think pope francis is showing himself to be just an extraordinarily thoughtful and soulful messenger of...
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May 19, 2013
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nevermind pope john paul ii and the resurgence of religion as a factor of polish nationalism which is a whole faceting part of the book. how did you come up with putting these things together? >> guest: it had a lot to do with my reporting in afghanistan after 9/11. you were there, too. if memory serves me, we stayed in the same house for a while. you are with "washington post," i was with "newsweek." that house kind of struck me at the time and had this shattered carpeting at the tv or light pictures any ranch style house but it was just like the kind of houses that we were going up in in the '70s when i was a kid. i was kind of struck by the. when he went outside and kabul you are driving around in 1970 in american cars, sometimes a tractate players in them, if you can remember what those were. all the ministry buildings, government buildings were built in the 1970s. then when he went to the bookstore in kabul you done all of these great postcards and books about afghanistan in the 1970s. what all of this showed was that afghanistan was actually an up-and-coming country in the 1970s
nevermind pope john paul ii and the resurgence of religion as a factor of polish nationalism which is a whole faceting part of the book. how did you come up with putting these things together? >> guest: it had a lot to do with my reporting in afghanistan after 9/11. you were there, too. if memory serves me, we stayed in the same house for a while. you are with "washington post," i was with "newsweek." that house kind of struck me at the time and had this shattered...
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May 13, 2013
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provocative pieces that this was a year in which basically the backlash over the turn of the markets and religion with politics in a big way setolleion towards the reactions of the earlier postwar. how do we come up with about? who could possibly write a book that says margaret thatcher, the ayatollah khomeini, the afghan communist and the iranian revolutionary pope john paul ii and the factor of the polish martial which is a fascinating part of the book. how did you come up with putting these things together? >> guest: it had a lot to do with my reporting in afghanistan after 9/11. you were there, too. if my memory serves me and we stayed in the same house for a while with "newsweek" and then the house kind of struck me and had this shag carpeting. it is just like he kind of houses that we were growing up in the 70's when i was a kid. and i was struck by that when you went outside your talking about the 1970's american cars sometimes with a track tape player and if you can remember what those were but the ministry buildings the they were built in the 1970's and then when you went to the bookstor
provocative pieces that this was a year in which basically the backlash over the turn of the markets and religion with politics in a big way setolleion towards the reactions of the earlier postwar. how do we come up with about? who could possibly write a book that says margaret thatcher, the ayatollah khomeini, the afghan communist and the iranian revolutionary pope john paul ii and the factor of the polish martial which is a fascinating part of the book. how did you come up with putting these...
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his policies as an essential part of democracy but implying that he supports terrorism because of his religion that's just very very. coming up president obama promised a more transparent white house after the scandals and controversy the bush years but is it in. a stray she has overseen countless unda cleared of wars and even the assassination of an american citizen how did the anti-war candidate become the kilis president more on this with journalist germy scale after the break. we are facing a lot of problem you know. because no one thought to drink school. no gun no permits. a lot of local what's not enough job is a law in the local needs one a community l.n.g. multan will be used. to give general dunford for a match up artist i was fights about how much fights. fights. arrived. the mission free accreditation free transport charges free arrangement free risk free. to tide free. old free broadcast cloning video for your media projects and free media and on to our t. dot com. about international airport in the very heart of moscow. about the rest of the news yesterday the senate judiciary co
his policies as an essential part of democracy but implying that he supports terrorism because of his religion that's just very very. coming up president obama promised a more transparent white house after the scandals and controversy the bush years but is it in. a stray she has overseen countless unda cleared of wars and even the assassination of an american citizen how did the anti-war candidate become the kilis president more on this with journalist germy scale after the break. we are facing...
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Jan 14, 2013
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what role can religion play talking about this problem? >> look. i definitely think everything that opens people's conscienceness about to crimes committed is a great role. education, religion is part of that or can be part of that process. has an enormous role to play. i just want to mention something with regarding eastern state. we look at that today and it's a tourist site. you can visit it. and we look at it and said, god, how horrible? what they don't realize is at least at that time people were asking more serious questions than they are today and we've taken our prisons so far out of sight that we don't see that in an awful lot of cases they're very much worse than they were 200 years ago. >> yeah. you know, todd, when we talk about the topic of prison reform to the extent there is going to be prison reform, that's going to require a political solution and looking at where the pressure comes in the political system, i wonder, how many states can ex-cons and not even have the vote. where is the political constituency that's going to be able
what role can religion play talking about this problem? >> look. i definitely think everything that opens people's conscienceness about to crimes committed is a great role. education, religion is part of that or can be part of that process. has an enormous role to play. i just want to mention something with regarding eastern state. we look at that today and it's a tourist site. you can visit it. and we look at it and said, god, how horrible? what they don't realize is at least at that...
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Feb 21, 2013
02/13
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buckley says gail is insufficiently respectful of religion despite its religious heritage and most elite academia in america. they don't present the free enterprise side of economics. or to keynesian. they are quasi-socialist. rusher agreed with all of that. but i think the greater affinity with buckley can be seen in buckley and his brother-in-law, brent purcell's 1964 book in which they save mccarthy has been a little too rough. he's made errors of judgment, but that causes really important and is being treated unfairly. that's exactly where rusher is a 1954, 55, 56. and here's her for he turns from the generic republican republicanism too hard movement conservatives them. there is a bit of a conservative movement before national review in 1955, but it was a little -- it was disorganized. the polite term might be entrepreneurial, individualistic whittaker chambers cited as the people popping out by kravitz. you never knew where they were coming from, where they were going. you might see this again now and then. rusher is thrilled to hear there is going to be a conservative weekly magaz
buckley says gail is insufficiently respectful of religion despite its religious heritage and most elite academia in america. they don't present the free enterprise side of economics. or to keynesian. they are quasi-socialist. rusher agreed with all of that. but i think the greater affinity with buckley can be seen in buckley and his brother-in-law, brent purcell's 1964 book in which they save mccarthy has been a little too rough. he's made errors of judgment, but that causes really important...
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Mar 16, 2013
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tired of people using their religion as a platform for political gain. with all due respect mr. vice president biden and mrmiss speaker pelosi, the fruit sucks. [applause] that we are going to bring up our next guest. this lady is fantastic. i spent some time with her before. she has been a national leader in the movement since the publication of her best-selling book in 1964, called "a choice not an echo.:" a fantastically the, please give a huge welcome to .rs. phyllis schlafly [applause] od morning cpac-ers. and thank you sarah palin for warming up this great crowd. analyze whyeed to we lost last year to barack obama, who has said he wants to fundamentally transformed america in ways we do not want to be transformed. that theuggest democrats had a better ground game than republicans. they did not make use of all new volunteers to get out the vote on election day. i would give you an example of how the democrats were so clever in using early voting to polls.eir people to the vot michelle obama made a speech at the university of iowa. they had set up on of the early voting plac
tired of people using their religion as a platform for political gain. with all due respect mr. vice president biden and mrmiss speaker pelosi, the fruit sucks. [applause] that we are going to bring up our next guest. this lady is fantastic. i spent some time with her before. she has been a national leader in the movement since the publication of her best-selling book in 1964, called "a choice not an echo.:" a fantastically the, please give a huge welcome to .rs. phyllis schlafly...
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Jun 9, 2013
06/13
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there is a difference between those who interpret the religion in a way that threatens us and those who belong and subscribe to islam who are muslims who are themselves threatened by these islamists and we must keep those two things i think in our minds at the same time. that is what i tried to do when i wrote my book. that was about what i perceive to be the case which was the way in which to my grade horror and fear the british ruling class was giving in to islamism, to this attempt to takeover, this attempt to undermine britain and the encroachment of islamic values in britain and the british basically saying let's go along with this. i was extremely careful as i think we must be to acknowledge there are many muslims who find this equally frightening and want nothing to do with it. >> you can watch this and other programs on line at booktv.org. former secretary of state george shultz sat down with booktv to talk about his new book "issues on my mind." in the book he weighs in on such topics as nuclear weapons the economy energy development in the war on drugs. this hour-long intervie
there is a difference between those who interpret the religion in a way that threatens us and those who belong and subscribe to islam who are muslims who are themselves threatened by these islamists and we must keep those two things i think in our minds at the same time. that is what i tried to do when i wrote my book. that was about what i perceive to be the case which was the way in which to my grade horror and fear the british ruling class was giving in to islamism, to this attempt to...
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Apr 16, 2013
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we exercise freedom of speech and exercise freedom of religion and freedom of the press. all these rights are rights we have to utilize. and they are rights that define for us and this constitution has within it, the supreme law of the land. there is another component of american exceptionalism as well, aside from these rights that are in the constitution and the free enterprise piece of this which gives our economy most vigor and i would advise people that are preparing to take the nationalization test, that's a choice by the educational foundation to understand our history and language, one of the questions that will be there, what is the economic system of the united states? the answer to that is free enterprise capitalism. that's what gives our economy its vigor. and when we move away, when we move towards government management of our economy, government bailouts, government deciding who is too big to allow o fail, so much of our economy loses its vigor and we lose some of the promise of the great american civilization. another piece of this also that i speak to relat
we exercise freedom of speech and exercise freedom of religion and freedom of the press. all these rights are rights we have to utilize. and they are rights that define for us and this constitution has within it, the supreme law of the land. there is another component of american exceptionalism as well, aside from these rights that are in the constitution and the free enterprise piece of this which gives our economy most vigor and i would advise people that are preparing to take the...